Author: Erik Wesner

Erik Wesner is the creator of amishamerica.com, and author of Success Made Simple: An Inside Look At Why Amish Businesses Thrive. Erik began visiting Amish communities in 2004 – eventually meeting thousands of Amish families while selling books.

He began writing about the Amish on this website in 2006, and is often cited in national media, including USA Today, The New York Times, and others on a wide range of Amish topics. A native of North Carolina, Erik has visited dozens of Amish communities across the country, and loves spending time with Amish friends and discovering new Amish places.

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Illinois Amish to Have Fingerprint ID Option in 2015

Illinois Amish to Have Fingerprint ID Option in 2015

An Illinois Public Media news blurb tells of a change in Illinois law in the new year that will benefit Amish with reservations about photo-based identification. Representative Adam Brown (R-Champaign) says it took some work to develop a solution to please both the state’s Amish and law enforcement: The new ID’s [sic] that serve as driver’s licenses for operators of horse-drawn buggys [sic] use a fingerprint instead….

Merlyn Yoder: What the Ausbund means to me

Merlyn Yoder: What the Ausbund means to me

Amish author Benuel Blank once wrote that the Ausbund, the centuries-old Anabaptist hymnal, is “not to be considered a holy book like the Bible”, but that it has nonetheless been very influential for Amish and their spiritual kin. Passing along a description of the book, Blank calls it “music for the soul, rather than music for the ear”. In use since the 1500s, the Ausbund continues to…

Favorite Posts of 2014

Here on the final day of 2014, I thought it would be a nice cap on the year to share links to favorites of the past 365 days. Below you’ll find those posts which got a lot of comments or otherwise good response from you, plus some of my personal favorites. Wherever you are today, I hope your year went as well as it could have–and that…

Winter Horseshoes, Handmade Cards & A New Resource

Winter Horseshoes, Handmade Cards & A New Resource

Three items for you today. First, David Arment returns with a little slice of life from Amish Indiana. Drivers in cold-weather climates use winter tires to get a better grip in snowy and icy conditions. Going by David’s account today, there must not be anything like that for Amish buggy horses (winter shoes?), which led to a small challenge for one family. Then, reader Jerry shares a…

Jim Cates on The Amish, Separation, and Politics

Jim Cates on The Amish, Separation, and Politics

I hope everyone had a safe and restful Christmas holiday. Snow arrived in my area at 11 pm the evening of the 25th, making it a last-minute White Christmas. Coming later this week, look for a guest post from a new voice out of Indiana, as well as “Favorites of 2014”. Today, Serving the Amish author Jim Cates returns with the first of a two-part look at…

1001 Questions & Answers On The Christian Life

1001 Questions & Answers On The Christian Life

1001 Questions & Answers On The Christian Life is an important little text which concisely lays out Christian beliefs as understood by the Amish. The book, first published by Pathway Publishers in 1992, was created with the input of over 20 members of the Amish ministry and lay people in various communities. It is based upon an older text (written in 1907) called 1000 Questions and…

How (Some) Amish Drivers Keep Warm in Winter

My calendar tells me it’s officially winter now, which may be what inspired me to start a log fire the other day (even though it wasn’t really fireplace-cold weather yet). In fact, I’ve got another crackler going as I write this post, since I love fires so much. Again not so much for heat purposes as much as for the smell and sound (I suspect I’m…

Pennsylvania Dutch Kitchen Terms Quiz (Part 2)

Today, the second half of the Pennsylvania Dutch kitchen terms quiz we started on Tuesday. If you missed it you’ll find the first 12 words here, and answer key for the original 12 here. All words courtesy of Mark Curtis of the Belle Center, Ohio Amish community. Some of you used knowledge of German to figure the first batch out. Mary Miller noted that two terms…

In the Kitchen with the Amish of Buchanan County, Iowa

In the Kitchen with the Amish of Buchanan County, Iowa

Suzanne Woods Fisher took a trip to the Amish community in Buchanan County, Iowa earlier this year. She shares that visit with us today–along with a few surprises she encountered. — The next time you have an occasion to travel to an off-the-beaten path Amish settlement, carve out a little extra time. Slow down and take a moment to look, really look, at the sprawling farmhouses that dot the two-lane…

Not An Outhouse: The Amish Phone Shack

Not An Outhouse: The Amish Phone Shack

In today’s guest post, David Arment of armentphoto.com discusses those funny little buildings you see here and there in Amish communities. — One thing that seems generally true is that Amish are reluctant to accept technology that connects them to the outside world. We English would say they live “off the grid”. In our area, phone shacks have sprung up as the answer to the need…